logo
Iguanas probably floated to Fiji millions of years ago on record-breaking raft journey, scientists say

Iguanas probably floated to Fiji millions of years ago on record-breaking raft journey, scientists say

The Guardian18-03-2025

Researchers have long wondered how iguanas got to Fiji. Most modern-day iguanas live in the Americas – thousands of miles and one giant ocean away.
They thought maybe they scurried there through Asia or Australia before volcanic activity pushed the Fijian islands so far away.
But new research suggests that millions of years ago, iguanas pulled off the 5,000 mile (8,000km) odyssey on a raft of floating vegetation – masses of uprooted trees and small plants. That journey is thought to be a record – further than any other land-dwelling vertebrate has ever travelled on the ocean.
Scientists think that's how iguanas got to the Galápagos Islands off Ecuador and between islands in the Caribbean. Initially they thought Fiji might be a bit too far for such a trip, but in a new study, researchers inspected the genes of 14 iguana species spanning the Americas, the Caribbean and Fiji. They discovered that Fijian iguanas were most closely related to desert iguanas from North America, and that the two groups split off around 31m years ago.
The researchers created a statistical model using that information and other data on where iguanas live today and how they may spread. It suggested that the iguanas most likely floated to Fiji from North America.
'Given what we know now, their result is by far the most strongly supported,' said Kevin de Queiroz, an evolutionary biologist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, who was not involved with the new study.
The research was published on Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The journey from North America to Fiji could have taken a few months, but these desert iguanas would have been ideal passengers because they were adept at resisting dehydration and could have snacked on the plants underfoot.
'If you had to pick a vertebrate to survive a long trip on a raft across an ocean, iguanas would be the one,' said study author Simon Scarpetta from the University of San Francisco, in an email.
Many Fijian iguana species are endangered, and an invasive green iguana roams the islands today, said study author Robert Fisher of the United States Geological Survey. Figuring out where these creatures came from can equip scientists with the tools to better protect them in the future.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cascadia subduction zone earthquake could be even worse than feared
Cascadia subduction zone earthquake could be even worse than feared

NBC News

time28-04-2025

  • NBC News

Cascadia subduction zone earthquake could be even worse than feared

When an earthquake rips along the Cascadia Subduction Zone fault, much of the U.S. west coast could shake violently for five minutes, and tsunami waves as tall as 100 feet could barrel toward shore. But that's just the start of the expected horrors. Even if coastal towns in Northern California, Oregon and Washington withstand that seismic onslaught, new research suggests floodwaters could seep into many of these vulnerable communities for good. That's because entire coastal shorelines are expected to drop by as much as 6½ feet when the earthquake strikes, according to new research, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). Researchers analyzed seismic and flood modeling to produce some of the most detailed estimates of how the Cascadia earthquake would drop — or subside — coastal shorelines and found that it could affect more than double the number of people, structures and roads currently at risk. The effect will also worsen over time, as intensifying climate change raises sea levels further. 'This lesser talked about hazard is going to persist for decades or centuries after the earthquake,' said Tina Dura, the study's lead author. 'The tsunami will come in and wash away and it's going to have big impacts, don't get me wrong, but the lasting change of the frequency of flooding … that's going to have to be dealt with.' Dura said geologic fossil evidence shows that previous Cascadia earthquakes immediately dropped the land level and turned dry ground into tidal mudflats in estuaries along the Pacific Northwest. 'That's going to happen again and we've built up a lot of those areas,' said Dura, who is an assistant professor of geosciences at Virginia Tech University. 'That's how we have ports there ... and that's where we built towns, and all that area is gonna drop down maybe over a meter, up to two meters.' The Cascadia Subduction Zone fault, which runs offshore along North America's west coast from Northern California to northern Vancouver Island, represents a looming threat. The fault has the capability to produce a magnitude-9.0 earthquake, and a large temblor is expected there at least once every 450-500 years, on average. The last of those major quakes occurred in 1700. The National Seismic Hazard Model suggests there is a 15% chance a magnitude-8.0 earthquake or stronger will rupture along the zone's margin within the next 50 years. When the fault rips, experts have said it will precipitate the worst natural disaster in the nation's history. A 2022 state and federal planning exercise for a Cascadia earthquake predicted about 14,000 fatalities, more than 100,000 injuries and the collapse of about 620,000 buildings in the Pacific Northwest, including 100 hospitals and 2,000 schools. The new research suggests that coastal planners must seriously reckon not only for the threat of intense shaking and tsunami waves, but also for the long-term reshaping and rapid sinking of the coastline itself. 'There's the flood itself and then there's the basically permanent change to land level at the coast and that has a big impact for what those communities have to plan for,' said Harold Tobin, the director of the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network and a professor at the University of Washington. 'Where are you going to put your school or hospital? Where are you going to build your transportation network? I think it's important to take the long view.' After the earthquake, Dura's research suggests, large portions of towns along the Pacific Northwest coastline, such as Seaside, Oregon; Westport, Washington; and Aberdeen, Washington, would be expected to flood at least once every 100 years, if not more often. The study also points out that sea level rise is accelerating as climate change intensifies, and the effects of post-earthquake flooding could worsen in the future. Global mean sea levels have risen by about 8 to 9 inches since 1880, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Sea level rise is expected to dramatically accelerate in coming decades because of global warming, with NOAA predicting another 10 to 12 inches on average by midcentury. Where you live could determine how dramatic sea level rise appears, and how it affects the coastline. While land in some regions of the U.S., like the Chesapeake Bay in Virginia, is slowly sinking in a process called subsidence, parts of the Pacific Northwest have been rising because of continental uplift. That rise in land level has offset some of the sea level rise to date. The uplift is the result of stress building up within the tectonic plates that form the Cascadia subduction zone offshore. At the subduction zone, the Juan de Fuca plate is being forced beneath the continental North American plate. This causes the North American plate to bow upward slightly, pushing the land level higher. Right now, the subduction zone fault is quiet and building stress. When the fault ruptures, the bowing of the plate will release and cause a rapid subsidence of the land level, essentially erasing centuries of uplift in an instant. 'That happens in minutes, and it can be on the order of meters,' Dura said. 'The land persists down, and that can be for, like I said, decades and centuries. And so any areas that are kind of on the cusp of the floodplain are now in it."

Scientists warn some dogs and cats are being bred to evolve the same 'smushed' faces - and it could lead to breathing, eating and birthing issues
Scientists warn some dogs and cats are being bred to evolve the same 'smushed' faces - and it could lead to breathing, eating and birthing issues

Daily Mail​

time28-04-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Scientists warn some dogs and cats are being bred to evolve the same 'smushed' faces - and it could lead to breathing, eating and birthing issues

Their 'smushed' faces and large, wide-set eyes have made them popular choices for pet owners. But flat-faced dogs and cats have been bred to such extremes that they now look more like each other than their own ancestors, experts reveal. Humans have pushed breeds such as Pug dogs and Persian cats to evolve with very similar features including broad skulls and short snouts. These characteristics, termed 'brachycephalic', have led to a range of health problems – most notably issues with breathing, eating and even giving birth. For the first time, scientists have uncovered examples of how breeding these cats and dogs has led to 'convergence' – the tendency of unrelated animals to evolve similar characteristics. Both species shared a common ancestor but have been evolutionarily separated for 50 million years. However, flat-faced cats and dogs have converged to such an extreme that they are more similar to each other than they are to most members of their own species or their ancestors. This phenomenon hadn't previously been observed in domesticated species, according to the paper. Flat-faced dogs and cats have been bred to such extremes that they now look more like each other than their own ancestors, experts reveal. Pictured: a Pug dog and a Persian cat 'Persian cats and Pug and Pekingese dogs all have skull shapes that are very similar to each other, with flat and short faces, and their muzzles and palettes are tilted up in the same way,' said Dr Abby Drake, senior lecturer at Cornell University. The researchers mapped the skull shapes using CT scans, compared them and discovered these similarities, even though the ancestors of cats and dogs looked quite different. Dogs descended from wolves, a larger animal with a long muzzle, while cats descended from wildcats, which are smaller animals with a shorter face and a snout. 'They start off in different places but because humans applied the same selection pressures they evolved to look almost identical to each other,' Dr Drake said. The same pattern of convergence has also occurred multiple times within each species, the researchers said. In dogs it occurred in Bulldog breeds, but then separately in Asian dog breeds such as Pekingese and Shih Tzu. In cats, the same traits can be seen in Persian, Himalayan and Burmese breeds. Artificial selection from breeding has led to a remarkable diversity of both cats and dogs, though dog diversity is even more extreme, the team said. 'We're seeing this very large evolutionary variation within a species that's only been evolving for a relatively very short amount of time,' Dr Drake added. 'That's a remarkable thing to see in evolution, which takes millions of years, but we did it with dogs by pushing them to the extremes.' The study, which was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal, also included experts from Washington University. They wrote: 'Brachycephalic cat and dog breeds have predispositions to many health disorders, some shared between species. 'As a result of these afflictions, pressure is mounting to ban the breeding of extreme brachycephalic individuals. 'We can hope such measures succeed for the welfare of our household companions, even if it has the effect of reversing this remarkable case of convergent evolution.' Earlier analysis has revealed that owners of flat-faced dogs see some of their traits, such as laziness, as a good thing rather than a sign their pet is unwell. The study from the Royal Veterinary College (RVC) found that the extreme conformations of French bulldogs, pugs and English bulldogs have been normalised. And despite a high risk of developing significant respiratory problems due to their flattened face, eye conditions due to their bulging eyes and skin infections due to their deep skin folds, many owners still believe 'nothing' could put them off buying the breeds. Commenting on the new findings Dr Rowena Packer, Senior Lecturer in Companion Animal Behaviour and Welfare Science at the Royal Veterinary College, said: 'From a biological perspective, it is remarkable that humans have moulded both dogs and cats into such an extraordinary array of morphologies, particularly skull shapes. 'However, this selection has largely been driven by human-centric desires, including the inherent attraction many of us have towards the 'cute' smushed faces of brachycephalic animals, perpetuating their international popularity. 'Modern animal welfare science has documented the severe and chronic harms that flat faces inflict, leading to long-term suffering in our canine and feline companions. 'Consequently, there is an urgent need for puppy and kitten buyers and breeders, as well as international policymakers, to reject these extremes and shift selective breeding back towards moderate, natural body shapes that confer animals the ability to live long, healthy and happy lives.' Previous research has also found that flat-faced breeds have a 40 per cent increased risk of dying compared to other breeds. For example, popular French Bulldogs have an average life expectancy of 9.8 years compared to Border Collies, who live for around 13.1 years. The word 'brachycephalic' means short or broad-headed. There are lots of pets selected for this appearance which have short snouts and flat faces. Examples include the Pug, Bulldog, Boxer, Pekingese, Persian cats, British shorthair cats and Netherland Dwarf rabbits. Because of this extreme body shape, flat-faced animals have a much higher risk of developing numerous painful illnesses and diseases than others. Health and welfare problems associated with brachycephaly include: - Anatomical defects of the upper airway causing breathing difficulties often associated with overheating, sleep apnoea, and regurgitation - Eye disease - Inability to mate or give birth naturally (requiring a Caesarean section) - Repeated skin infections - Dental problems Many owners aren't aware that the 'cute' way their pet looks can cause serious and often life-limiting health problems and compromise their welfare.

Nasa rover discovers largest organic compounds yet found on Mars
Nasa rover discovers largest organic compounds yet found on Mars

The Guardian

time24-03-2025

  • The Guardian

Nasa rover discovers largest organic compounds yet found on Mars

Nasa's Curiosity rover has found the largest organic compounds ever seen on Mars, raising tantalising questions about whether life emerged on the red planet billions of years ago. The compounds were detected in a 3.7bn-year-old rock sample collected in Yellowknife Bay, an ancient Martian lakebed that harboured all the necessary ingredients for life in the planet's warmer, wetter past. Tests onboard the rover found that the rock contained long-chain alkanes, organic molecules thought to be remnants of fatty acids. The compounds can be made by lifeless chemical reactions, but are crucial constituents of cell membranes in all living organisms on Earth. The researchers do not claim to have found a biosignature – a 'smoking gun' indicating life was once present – but one expert said the material represented the best chance that scientists had ever had for identifying remains of life on Mars. 'These molecules can be made by chemistry or biology,' said Dr Caroline Freissinet, an analytical chemist who led the research at the Atmospheres and Space Observations Laboratory in Guyancourt, near Paris. 'If we have long-chain fatty acids on Mars, those could come – and it's only one hypothesis – from membrane degradation of cells present 3.7bn years ago.' The Curiosity rover has trundled more than 20 miles (32km) across the Gale crater since landing on Mars in 2012. Six years into the mission, it detected traces of organics in the ancient mudstone, but all were relatively short carbon-chain molecules. For the latest study, Freissinet and her colleagues developed a new procedure to test more of the sample drilled from the mudstone. This time, Curiosity detected much larger organics, namely decane, undecane and dodecane. Work on Earth showed that the Martian rock sample, known as Cumberland, probably contained carboxylic acids, or fatty acids, that converted to alkanes in the heating process. 'Although abiotic processes can form these acids, they are considered universal products of biochemistry, terrestrial, and perhaps Martian,' the scientists wrote in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Further analysis of the organics only deepened the intrigue. When organisms on Earth make fatty acids, the compounds tend to contain more even numbers than odd numbers of carbon atoms. This is because some enzymes build fatty acids by adding two carbon atoms at a time. The scientists saw hints of this in the Martian organics, too. 'Cumberland is teasing us,' Freissinet said. 'The one in the middle with 12 carbons is more abundant than the other two. We have the same trend on Mars, but a trend drawn from three molecules is not a real trend. Still, it's very intriguing.' The finding suggests, at the very least, that organic signatures of life can be preserved in Martian rock for billions of years, bolstering hopes that should life ever have emerged on the planet, its remnants might still be found. The pressing question is what to do next. Curiosity is carrying a second sample of the rock that scientists want to analyse for even larger organics. This might boost evidence for more fatty acids containing even numbers of carbons. But that would still not be conclusive. John Eiler, a professor of geology and geochemistry at the California Institute of Technology, said analysing the different isotopes of carbon and hydrogen in the organics could reveal their origins. However, the tests require equipment found in only a handful of labs on Earth. 'At present, there is no plausible path to making such measurements using an in-situ instrument on Mars,' he said. That will have to wait for a Mars sample-return mission. 'The findings reported in this paper present the best chance we have seen for identifying the remains of life on Mars,' said Eiler. 'But sealing the deal absolutely requires return of such samples to Earth.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store